0 a bird that uses its strong beak to make holes in tree trunks in order to find insects to eat
1 a bird with a strong beak that it hammers into tree trunks to find insects to eat
After 2004, people hurried to the location where Sparling had seen the woodpecker.
Availability of nesting sites as a limit to woodpecker populations.
The absence or scarcity of large, snag-foraging woodpeckers from older logged stands suggests that this resource may remain in low abundance for a considerable time.
Results from woodpecker surveys revealed an atypical response to logging.
The other birds get the water, and ever since then the woodpecker has been pecking at things.
However, these studies lacked sufficient data to identify the most affected woodpecker species.
The woodpecker community may be affected by the reduction in forest structural complexity that results from silvicultural treatments and may persist throughout the logging cycle.
Although total woodpecker abundance differed only slightly between forest types, relative abundance of certain species differed significantly.